Bringing “cultural diplomacy” to the classics
Wiebke Denecke, an expert in East Asian literature, wants to add to the international, interdisciplinary study of the humanities at MIT.
Wiebke Denecke, an expert in East Asian literature, wants to add to the international, interdisciplinary study of the humanities at MIT.
An expert in medieval literature, Arthur Bahr is working toward a book on the Pearl-Manuscript — a rare 14th-century document that includes “Pearl” and three other works.
New professors join Comparative Media Studies/Writing, Economics, Literature, Philosophy, and Political Science.
Students in 21L.434 discover that the world-making of science fiction is not only a way to envision possible futures, but a powerful way to think about the world we currently inhabit.
New ways to think about and practice protective masking, from faculty in the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences.
As a teacher, Kampf was consistently both a generous force of inclusion and a prod of conscience.
Graduating seniors and recent alumni will spend upcoming year abroad on Fulbright grants.
Classicist Stephanie Frampton traverses disciplines to study how the content and form of writing interacted in the ancient world.
Anikeeva, Fuller, Tisdale, and White receive MIT's highest honor in undergraduate teaching.
Three innovative research projects in literature, plant epigenetics, and chemical engineering will be supported by Professor Amar G. Bose Research Grants.
SHASS faculty members Nikhil Agarwal, Sana Aiyar, Stephanie Frampton, Daniel Hidalgo, and Miriam Schoenfield were recently granted tenure.
How the humanities, arts, and social science fields can help shape the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing — and benefit from advanced computing.
The new members of Xi of Massachusetts, the MIT chapter of PBK, combine the best of humanities, natural science, and social science scholarship.
Faculty representing all five MIT schools offer views on the ethical and societal implications of new technologies.
Stephanie Frampton’s new book explores the written word in the Roman world.